Illegal Logging Focus Of LEED Pilot Credit

“Today, it is possible to achieve the LEED wood credit and still have illegal wood in a LEED certified project,” says Scot Horst, chief product officer for the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC). “This is because LEED projects receive credit for a percentage of the wood on the project, rather than on all wood used. LEED is a global standard with a vision of market transformation. Addressing the illegal wood issue in LEED projects, especially in projects outside of the U.S., comes at a critical time both for the global issue of illegal logging and unfair forestry practices and also for LEED and its growing influence.”

As a result, today the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) announced the quarterly addenda to the LEED green building rating system, which includes a new pilot Alternative Compliance Path (ACP) credit that is designed to further advance environmentally responsible forest management and help rid our buildings of illegal wood by promoting the use of wood that is verified to be legal. The pilot ACP builds on the infrastructure that has been built around responsible wood sourcing and chain of custody to test an approach to prerequisite requirements. This could serve as a model for other building materials.

While LEED has always rewarded leadership in materials specification, this new ACP seeks to leverage LEED’s market power by focusing attention on the need for more comprehensive and effective legality verification of building products. The pilot ACP is designed to address a critical piece of the supply chain and reward project teams who proactively verify that the wood they are using is legal.

This new pilot ACP is applicable to both LEED 2009 and LEED v4 systems.

Illegal Logging Significant To Sourcing

“Healthy, vibrant forests are an essential piece of life as we know it,” said Rick Fedrizzi, CEO and founding chair, USGBC. “LEED has made tremendous strides by promoting leadership on sourcing of forestry products. We want LEED to also be a significant driver for stopping illegal logging. As we have begun looking at approaches to incentivize responsible sourcing of all materials that go into our buildings – such as concrete, steel, copper and other materials – we recognize the need to address both the top – rewarding the best — as well as the bottom by eliminating unacceptable practices.”

Over the last 15 years, the green building industry has invested a significant amount of resources related to responsible procurement of forest products, which have taken up the vast majority of the debate about raw materials sourcing.

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